The plane of
complex numbers spanned by the vectors 1 and

, where

is the
imaginary number. Every
complex number corresponds to a unique
point in the complex plane. The
line in the plane with

is the
real line. The complex plane is sometimes called the Argand plane or Gauss plane, and a plot of
complex numbers in the plane is sometimes called an
Argand diagram.
The complex plane together with the point at infinity

is known as the
Riemann sphere or extended complex plane and denoted

or

. However, the notation

is also used to denote the
punctured plane 
.
The
Riemann sphere 
, also called the
extended complex plane. The notation

is sometimes also used (Krantz 1999, p. 82).
The notation

is also used to denote the
punctured plane 
.
The term "real line" has a number of different meanings in mathematics.
Most commonly, "real line" is used to mean
real axis, i.e., a
line with a fixed scale so that every
real number corresponds to a unique
point on the
line. The generalization of the real line to two dimensions is called the
complex plane.
The term "real line" is also used to distinguish an ordinary
line from a so-called
imaginary line which can arise in algebraic geometry.